New Common Core Math Lesson for Math Practice Standards to Help Students Confidently Solve Problems and Justify Solutions

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In our effort to help educators become as effective as possible...we’ve visited thousands of classrooms and traveled hundreds of miles to find the strategies and best practices that master teachers and effective educators are using...

Salt Lake City (PRWEB)July 17, 2014

School Improvement Network, the leader in educator effectiveness resources, today announced a new video of a Common Core math lesson aligned to practice standard 7 to help students confidently solve problems and justify solutions. The video is available to all educators as part of the weekly publication, “Strategy of the Week.”

“In our effort to help educators become as effective as possible in order to help 100 percent of students become college and career ready, we’ve visited thousands of classrooms and traveled hundreds of miles to find the strategies and best practices that master teachers and effective educators are using to positively impact students,” said Chet D. Linton, CEO and president of School Improvement Network. “Resources like this Common Core math lesson show that with the right tools, these practices are scalable to any classroom, school, or system.”

In this video, educators will see a secondary Common Core math lesson where teachers guide students to:

Founded in 1991 by teachers, School Improvement Network has spent decades researching and documenting the best practices in education. From this research, School Improvement Network has developed Edivation, a personalized professional learning solution for educators. Research shows that districts and schools that use the tools in Edivation produce better teachers and, as a result, experience dramatic increases in student achievement, driving up student proficiency by an average of 18 percent in a single year when compared to neighboring schools. School Improvement Network works with thousands of schools and districts in every state and around the world and has visited over 3,500 classrooms to document best practices in action. Learn more at http://www.schoolimprovement.com.

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